In the period between 2021 and 2022, immediately following the Covid-19 lockdowns, there were 37 professional or academic productions of The Tempest in the United States, making it by far the most produced of Shakespeare's plays. This volume proposes an intriguing tri-part relationship between The Tempest, Ben Jonson's The Masque of Blackness (1605), and Othello (c. 1604). It reveals a shared understanding of race and blackness, one which also shaped Shakespeare's Cymbeline and The Winter's Tale, likely written alongside The Tempest. Throughout, the book explores the presence of masquing in Shakespeare's work, both textually and in production, ultimately arguing that The Tempest's particular staging of race in both early modern and twenty-first-century American production owes a great debt to the coterie court performances of Jacobean masques.
Given Masquing Blackness' dual focus on theatre history and contemporary performance, the book appeals to performance scholars and historians as well as theatrical practitioners and students of American critical race theory. It has a home in graduate and undergraduate courses as well as in the libraries of Shakespeare festival producers, artists, and audiences.
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